2022/12/05
68. Let There Be Light!
At
the end of the memoir of Daniel Pittet, who was sexually abused by a Catholic
priest when he was a child, is a record of an interview conducted by Morerod,
the Bishop of the diocese, and Mr Lepon, the collaborator of the memoir, with
the perpetrator, Father Allaz, the year before its publication. Father Allaz, considering
he was 76 years old at the time of the interview, must have been a man who, as
we discussed in the previous issue, had himself knelt before priests at
communion with lips open and tongue out, and after he was ordained, he would
have been one of the priests who would have given the Eucharist to such people.
The fact that such a grave crime could remain uncovered for so long is the
effect of a combination of great power and authority. And the continued
practice of communion in that manner risked making priests dependent on authority
and turning them toward acts that would gratify their lust for control (cf.
blog №67). In addition, the priests must have recited the words of the
centurion with the congregation just before communion at every Mass (cf.
Matthew 8:8).
As
discussed in blog №66, the centurion's human humility may be more oriented
toward stirring up the desire for domination than keeping people away from it.
The analogy he drew of his interactions with his subordinate soldiers (cf.
Matthew 8:9) shows that his humility stems from the attitude of one who is under
the human authority and submits to that authority. So, he could automatically
believe that his son (servant) would be healed if Jesus, who was under exceptional
authority, commanded. And Jesus' words, "[B]e it done for you as you
have believed" (Matthew 8:13), was fulfilled. But he did not return to
Jesus to thank him and praise God after his son's (servant's) recovery. That was
because, like all people of that time, it never occurred to him that Jesus was
God. He must have thought of Jesus as one of the authoritative prophets like
Elijah and Jeremiah, just like the people of his time (cf. John 16:13-14). If
believers continue to recite these centurion-derived words before the Eucharist
at every Mass, there will be a danger of unconsciously falling into a state of
"It never occurred to him that Jesus was God,"
and losing the basis for believing that the Eucharist is Jesus himself.
In
the above interview transcript, Father Allaz, who had been forbidden from the priestly
ministry and said he had no lingering attachment for liturgy or rituals, asks
himself, "Who is God?" "What have I done, O God?" "Who
am I?" "Why didn't God stop me?" but he never realized the
answer for them. Like the centurion, he could not break through the state of
"It never occurred to him that Jesus was God." It was the words of
the Heavenly Father given to Peter that broke through this state (cf. Matthew
6:13-20). The words that the priest and the congregation should chant together
in the presence of the Eucharist after the priest's words, "Behold the
Lamb of God, behold him who takes away the sins of the world. Blessed are those called to the supper of the Lamb,"
are Peter's confession of faith, "You are
the Christ, the Son of the living God" (Matthew 16:16). The Lamb of
God "who takes away the sins of the world" suggests the Son of the
living God, the Christ. Therefore, "Blessed are those called to the supper
of the Lamb" (cf. Revelation 19:9). Hence, Peter's confession of faith is "true
words of God" (Revelation 19:9).
Maria
K. M.
No comments:
Post a Comment